CRI
Distributing School Video Nationwide
Will
Trumpet Carpet's Benefits in Learning Environments
Contact: CRI Communications Department, 706.428.2103
Dalton, GA (January 12, 2005) - A
new video entitled Beautiful Spaces for Children: Building High Performance
Schools, is now available from the Carpet and Rug Institute (CRI). It
has been mailed to more than 28,000 school administrators to help them understand
the contribution of carpet to a better learning environment and focus on
the importance of proper maintenance.
The
CD-ROM videos are part of CRI's ongoing campaign to educate school officials
about the facts surrounding carpet as a superior flooring choice, based
on independent scientific studies, and to dispel misunderstanding and
wrong information.
Those receiving the video include members of the National
Association of Secondary School Principles (NASSP), American
Association of School Administrators (AASA), and the
National Association of Elementary School Principals (NAESP).
In addition to the direct mail distribution, the video will be shown
at events and trade shows, as well as other presentations to school administrators,
architects, facility managers, and other appropriate audiences.
The video features well-known designers, authors, architects and psychologists
who link school environment design and furnishings to educational process.
It includes facts about carpet care and cost-efficiency and demonstrates
how interior design solutions aid in learning and help improve the indoor
environment from an air quality perspective.
"It is a fact that the quality of the physical environment plays
a key role and can have a tremendous influence on the way a child learns,"
said Werner Braun, president of the Carpet and Rug Institute. "Carpet
provides qualities that no other floor surface can provide, and is, according
to surveys, the floor covering of choice among the majority of teachers
nationwide."
The video highlights the benefits of carpet in a school, including reduction
of slips and falls, along with the severity of injuries when such accidents
occur, and greater acoustic superiority than other floor surfaces.
"One out of every four spoken words is inaudible in rooms with hard
surfaces," noted Braun. "When you think about the developing
mind of a child you realize the importance of being able to understand
every spoken word clearly."
The video also documents how carpet provides a filter-like effect that
can keep allergens and particles out of the breathing zone until they
are removed by proper vacuum cleaning. In addition, the video demonstrates
how carpet is less expensive to maintain than hard-surface flooring, when
both are maintained properly.
The video can also be seen
on the CRI website along with the underlying and supportive data.
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